Publications by authors named "Freund P"

To clarify how skin and internal temperatures interact in control of skin blood flow, five male paraplegic subjects (lesions at the level of thoracic vertebrae 1-11) (29-47 yr old) were heated in water-perfused suits to elevate oral temperature (To) 1-1.5 degrees C. In part I only the insensate skin was heated; sensate skin was kept at 32-34 degrees C.

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The automatic implantable defibrillator is an electronic device capable of diagnosing and correcting malignant venticular arrhythmias. While major thoracic surgery was required in the original 24 implants, a new technique for implanting the device has been developed. The first subxiphoid implantations have been accomplished with the defibrillatory function successfully tested intraoperatively.

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Six normal young men were studied during 50 min of moderate exercise (100-137 W) that included one 15-min (protocol 1) or two 10-min periods of breathing 11-12% O2 (in N2) (protocol 2). Absolute work intensity was kept constant for each subject, but relative severity increased during hypoxia owing to reduction in maximum O2 uptake. Our question was whether hypoxia causes cutaneous vasoconstriction; this in turn should cause a rise in esophageal temperature (Tes) and a shift in the forearm skin blood flow (SkBF)-Tes relationship.

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We conducted a two-part study to determine whether the renin-angiotensin system contributes to the rise in splanchnic vascular resistance (SVR) during heat stress (rectal temperature was raised 1 degree C). In experiment 1 (control) seven men on a normal salt diet were directly heated (water-perfused suits) for 40-50 min. Arterial pressure (85 Torr) was unchanged; plasma renin activity (PRA) rose from 102 to 239 ng angiotensin I.

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Do the vasomotor functions unique to skin recover in a skin graft? To determine whether locally mediated vasodilation and active reflex vasodilation recovery, we applied direct heating and whole-body heating, respectively. Also, presence of sympathetic cutaneous vasoconstriction was tested with application of lower body negative pressure (LBNP) during local heating. Subjects were six men who had been severely burned.

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In the rare syndrome, hereditary anhidrotic ectodermal dysplasia (AED), sweat glands are congenitally absent. Assuming normal vasculature and normal central mechanisms, presence or absence of active cutaneous vasodilation (AVD) in hyperthermic subjects with AED critically tests the hypothesis that AVD is a consequence of sudomotor activity. Three men with full expression of the syndrome and a woman who is mosaic were heated in water-perfused suits until oral temperature was 1.

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Differential nerve block from peridural anesthesia was used to determine a) if the pressor response to muscle ischemia in man is caused by stimulation of small sensory nerve fibers and b) if these fibers contribute to cardiovascular-respiratory responses during dynamic exercise. Four men exercised at 50-100 W for 5 min. Muscle ischemia and a sustained pressor response were produced by total circulatory occlusion of both legs beginning 30 s before the end of exercise and continuing for 3 min postexercise.

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We sought to determine whether the pressor response to exercise-induced muscle ischemia is related to the mass of tissue rendered ischemic. Six men repeatedly exercised for 5 min at a fixed load between 75 and 150 W (bicycle ergometer). Thirty seconds before the end of exercise, circulation to one calf, two calves, one leg, and two legs was arrested with pneumatic cuffs in successive tests with 15-min recovery periods interspersed.

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